Gastrointestinal
Treatments
A large portion of the stomach is removed to reduce food intake and hormonal hunger signals — one of the most commonly performed bariatric procedures.
An adjustable band is placed around the upper stomach to create a small pouch and help control portion size.
A temporary balloon is placed inside the stomach to reduce appetite and support medically supervised weight loss.
A simplified bypass procedure that reduces stomach size and reroutes the intestine to lower calorie absorption.
A small stomach pouch is created and connected to the intestine — a gold-standard bariatric surgery for severe obesity.
Bariatric procedures are performed primarily to improve type 2 diabetes and obesity-related metabolic disorders.
The upper stomach is wrapped around the lower oesophagus to strengthen the valve and prevent acid reflux.
Minimally invasive keyhole surgery used to control severe reflux disease when medications do not provide lasting relief.
Tight muscles at the lower end of the oesophagus are surgically divided to improve swallowing.
Minimally invasive keyhole surgery that relieves swallowing difficulty while preserving digestive function.
Diseased segments of the intestine are removed to relieve obstruction, bleeding, or severe inflammation.
The small intestine is diverted to an opening in the abdominal wall when bowel rest or diversion is required.
The affected bowel segment is removed, and healthy ends are reconnected to restore continuity.
Diseased bowel is removed, and a temporary or permanent stoma is created for stool diversion.
A pouch is created from the small intestine and connected to the anus to restore bowel passage after colon removal.
The small intestine is diverted to an opening in the abdominal wall when bowel rest or diversion is required.
The affected bowel segment is removed, and healthy ends are reconnected to restore continuity.
The inflamed or infected section of the colon is removed to prevent recurrent attacks and complications.
The affected bowel segment is removed, and healthy ends are reconnected to restore continuity.
Diseased bowel is removed, and a temporary or permanent stoma is created for stool diversion.
Polyps are removed during endoscopy to prevent progression into colorectal cancer.
Larger or complex polyps are removed using advanced endoscopic resection techniques.
Surgical repair restores the rectum to its normal position and helps prevent recurrent prolapse.
Laparoscopic fixation of the rectum to the sacrum. Preferred procedure for fitting patients with the lowest recurrence rate of all repair options.
The cancer-affected portion of the colon and nearby lymph nodes are surgically removed.
The affected bowel segment is removed, and healthy ends are reconnected to restore continuity.
Diseased bowel is removed, and a temporary or permanent stoma is created for stool diversion.
Drug therapy is used to destroy remaining cancer cells and reduce recurrence risk.
Targeted radiation is used to control tumour growth and improve cancer treatment outcomes.
The small intestine is diverted to an opening in the abdominal wall when bowel rest or diversion is required.
A specialised rectal cancer surgery where the rectum and surrounding lymphatic tissue (mesorectum) are completely removed.
A procedure to remove the diseased part of the rectum or lower colon, usually for cancer. The healthy ends are reconnected to maintain normal bowel function.
A surgery for very low rectal cancers where the rectum and anus are removed. A permanent colostomy is created for waste elimination.
A stent is placed to improve drainage from the pancreatic duct and reduce pain or blockage.
The pancreatic duct is opened and connected to the intestine to relieve ductal obstruction.
Diseased tissue in the pancreatic head is removed, and drainage is improved to reduce pain and complications.
The tail or body of the pancreas is surgically removed when disease is localised to that region.
Endoscopic treatment removes bile duct stones, causing obstruction and pancreatitis.
Image-guided drainage is performed to relieve infected or symptomatic fluid collections.
Dead pancreatic tissue is removed endoscopically in severe necrotising pancreatitis.
Removal of the head of the pancreas along with part of the stomach, duodenum, and bile duct — commonly performed for tumours in the pancreatic head.
Removal of the body and tail of the pancreas is often performed for tumours located in these regions.
A catheter is placed through the skin to drain the pseudocyst under imaging guidance.
Minimally invasive surgery creates a drainage pathway between the cyst and stomach.
The circular stapling technique reduces prolapsed haemorrhoids and is associated with less postoperative pain.
Small bands are applied to internal haemorrhoids to cut off the blood supply and shrink them.
A solution is injected into haemorrhoids to shrink the vessels and reduce bleeding.
Laser energy is used to shrink haemorrhoidal tissue with minimal cuts and reduced discomfort.
Stapling repositions prolapsed haemorrhoids and reduces their blood supply.
Surgical excision removes large or advanced haemorrhoids causing significant symptoms.
A small part of the anal sphincter is divided to reduce spasm and allow the fissure to heal.
Chronic fissure tissue is surgically removed to promote healing and symptom relief.
Video-assisted treatment allows the fistula tract to be identified and treated from within.
The fistula tract is surgically opened to allow healing from inside outward.
Laser energy is used to close the fistula tract with minimal tissue damage.
The fistula tract is tied off in the intersphincteric plane to preserve sphincter muscles.
A surgical thread is placed through the tract to aid drainage and staged healing.
Healthy tissue is used to close the internal opening of the fistula while preserving continence.
The abscess is surgically opened and drained to relieve pain and clear infection.
Infected or dead tissue is removed to control severe soft tissue infection.
Minimally invasive surgical drainage is performed when percutaneous drainage is insufficient.
Combined drainage approaches are used depending on abscess size, location, and complexity.
Cyst fluid is drained, and a sclerosing agent is used to reduce recurrence.
The outer wall of the cyst is removed laparoscopically to allow continuous drainage.
The liver cyst is surgically removed using minimally invasive techniques when indicated.
A perforation is closed surgically using a patch technique through minimally invasive surgery.
Part of the stomach is removed in severe or complicated ulcer disease when required.
Early superficial stomach lesions are removed endoscopically from the inner lining.
The cancer-affected portion of the stomach is surgically removed while preserving the remaining stomach.
The entire stomach is removed for more extensive or advanced stomach cancer.
The gallbladder is surgically removed — the definitive treatment for symptomatic gallstones and recurrent gallbladder attacks.
The gallbladder is surgically removed — the definitive treatment for symptomatic gallstones and recurrent gallbladder attacks.
The gallbladder is surgically removed — the definitive treatment for symptomatic gallstones and recurrent gallbladder attacks.
Drug therapy is used to control disease, reduce recurrence, or treat advanced gallbladder cancer.
Targeted radiation may be used to control cancer locally or as part of combined treatment.
The inflamed appendix is surgically removed to prevent rupture and spread of infection.
Minimally invasive appendix removal performed through small incisions for faster recovery.
The infected abscess is opened and drained to relieve pain and infection.
The sinus tract is removed, and the wound is closed directly.
A flap technique is used to close the defect and reduce recurrence in complex disease.
Laser energy is used to ablate the sinus tract with minimal cuts and faster healing.
Diseased bowel segments are removed when obstruction, perforation, or severe damage is present.
A bowel segment is removed, and a stoma is created when immediate reconnection is not safe.
The small intestine is diverted to an opening in the abdominal wall when bowel rest or diversion is required.
The abdominal wall defect at a previous surgical scar is repaired through a traditional incision and reinforced with mesh.
Minimally invasive repair performed through small incisions using a camera and mesh reinforcement.
Advanced abdominal wall reconstruction used to repair very large or complex incisional hernias.
The groin hernia is repaired through a traditional incision and reinforced with mesh to prevent recurrence.
Minimally invasive repair performed through small incisions using a laparoscopic camera and mesh placement.
The abdominal wall defect near the belly button is repaired through a small incision and reinforced with mesh when needed.
Minimally invasive repair using laparoscopic instruments through small incisions.
The femoral canal defect is repaired through a surgical incision to prevent obstruction or strangulation.
Minimally invasive repair using a laparoscopic camera and mesh reinforcement.
The abdominal wall defect is repaired through a traditional surgical incision and reinforced with mesh.
Minimally invasive mesh repair performed through small incisions using laparoscopic techniques.
Advanced surgical technique used to reconstruct large abdominal wall defects.
Traditional surgical repair of the hiatal hernia with reconstruction of the anti-reflux valve.
Minimally invasive hiatal hernia repair performed through small incisions with faster recovery.
The diaphragmatic defect is repaired through a traditional surgical incision to restore proper anatomy.
Minimally invasive repair performed using laparoscopic instruments and mesh reinforcement when required.
The spleen is surgically removed when indicated due to trauma, disease, or other surgical conditions.
It is the emergency surgical management of life-threatening injuries from blunt or penetrating abdominal and thoracoabdominal trauma.
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